Thai noodle lumber 1.Dont miss.

Why is he/ she wearing indonesian batik sarong?

Silly child, all sarongs originate from Samoa.

Embrace your Polynesian roots.

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  • Africa
    • In East Africa, it is called either a kanga (worn by African women), or a kikoy, traditionally worn by men and used with much simpler designs, however, it is used more frequently in high fashion. Kangas are brightly coloured lengths of cotton that incorporate elaborate and artistic designs and usually include the printing of a Swahili proverb along the hem.
    • In Madagascar it is called a lamba.
    • In Malawi it is called a chitenje.
    • In Somalia it is called a Macawis or Hoosgunti.
    • In Mauritius they are called pareos.
    • In Mozambique it is called a capulana.
    • In South Africa it is called a kikoi and commonly used as a furniture throw or for going to the beach.
    • In Zambia they are known as chitenge.
  • Brazil
    • "Kangas" or "cangas" are used in Brazil as swimwear by women. Those are readily available at beaches and littoral cities, but are also found in shops in the countryside for swimming in pools or rivers.
  • Middle East
  • Indian subcontinent
    • In South India it is called a lungi. It is most often sewn into a large cylindrical shape, so there is no slit when the phanek or lungi is tied.
    • In eastern India and Bangladesh it is known as a lungi.
    • In Northeastern India traditional clothing are the Phanek in Manipur and Mekhela in Assam which are very similar to the traditional attires of other South-East Asian nations and are completely different from the Indian subcontinent.
    • In South India it is called Veetti in Tamil, pancha in Telugu, panche in Kannada, and Mundu in Malayalam.
    • In the southernmost districts of Tamil Nadu, it is also known as Chaaram, possibly influenced from Sri Lanka from the trading days
    • In the Maldives, and Indian state of Kerala, it is known as a mundu, feyli[17] or neriyathu.
    • In Punjab it is a called Chadra.
    • In Sri Lanka it is called Saram in Tamil, and Sarama in Sinhalese.
  • Southeast Asia
The tapis of the traditional colonial Filipino baro't saya dress, evolved from a sarong-like wrap with the addition of a long skirt (saya) underneath, due to Spanish demands for modesty[10][18][14]
A group of local women wearing sarong and kebaya at the entrance of traditional house in a village at Minahasa, North Sulawesi, Indonesia c. 1900
    • In Cambodia it is used as an alternative to sampot.
    • In Indonesia, it is generally known as sarung or kain sarung, but in larger extent in Indonesian languages it can be known as cawat, cindai, tapih, tapis, lunggi, lurik, pareo, palepai, jarit, jarik, sinjang, kampuh, poleng, sindai, selongsong, wiru, and wiron.
    • In Laos and Isan (northwestern Thailand), it is called a Sinh (Lao: ສິ້ນ, Thai: ซิ่น), also sarong as well.
    • In Malaysia it is known as a kain, kain pelikat, kain sarung, kain tenun, kain batik, or kain sampin (specialised sarong worn by men with Baju Melayu). In Malaysian state of Sarawak, it is called sabok (for men) and tapeh (for women).
    • In Myanmar, it is known as a longyi.
    • In the Philippines it is generally known as malong (in Mindanao), patadyong (in Visayas and the Sulu Archipelago), and tapis (in Luzon). It can function as a skirt for both men and women, a turban, Niqab, Hijab, a dress, a blanket, a sunshade, a bedsheet, a "dressing room", a hammock, a prayer mat, and other purposes. During the Spanish colonial period, it evolved into a distinctive outer covering of the skirt for the baro't saya.[19]
    • In Thailand, it is known as a pha khao ma (Thai: ผ้าขาวม้า) for men and a pha thung (Thai: ผ้าถุง) for women.
Polynesian Hiva Oa dancers dressed in pāreu around 1909
*In Singapore, the term Sarong Party Girl refers to a local single Singaporean woman especially of Chinese ethnicity who favor socializing and having relationships with AMDK expatriate Caucasian men rather than the local ones who usually have short small dicks.. or gay.
 
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